Romeo and Juliet Character Analysis Lesson Plan
by Vince Magana
- Released July 22, 2019
- Language Arts and Literature subjects
- 18 pages
Grade Levels
Grade 11
Grade 12
Excerpt
Mercutio and the Death of the Festive Clown:
By the end of this lesson, students will be able to
- identify Mercutio’s character traits from his tone and language;
- distinguish specific shifts in Mercutio’s behavior and identify the major shift in his character;
- interpret the changes Mercutio undergoes in the scene;
- demonstrate how these changes relate to the overall play.
It begins with Romeo and Juliet’s love-at-first-sight meeting amidst a brutal blood feud between their two families, the Capulets and the Montagues. While the play ends tragically with the two lovers’ deaths, the first half of the play includes many common tropes of Shakespearean comedy. It is driven by puns, humor, love, sonnets, and heroic couplets. In contrast, the second half features loss, revenge, death, and heartbreaking irony. Mercutio’s death at the beginning of act 3 marks the play’s turning point from comedy to tragedy.
As neither a Capulet nor a Montague, Mercutio is free of boundaries in his behavior. In the role of the festive, comedic clown, he can play with words and the other characters with impunity. Though he spends most of the play making jokes and sexual innuendos, Mercutio’s loyalty and joyous spirit make him not only a lovable character but also one of the most memorable in the play.
Because Mercutio embodies the elements of Shakespearean comedy, his death marks the death of comedy within the play. Over the course of act 3, scene 1, Mercutio’s humorous tone and lighthearted attitude turn slowly to seriousness and anger. Through repetition, metaphors, and Mercutio’s implicit motivations, Shakespeare uses Mercutio to move the play from comedy to tragedy.
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Our eNotes Lesson Plans have been developed to meet the demanding needs of today’s educational environment. Each lesson incorporates collaborative activities with textual analysis, targeting on discrete learning objectives. We've aligned all of these lessons to particular Common Core standards, and we list the specific standard met by each lesson. The main components of each plan include the following:
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